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US Senate approves huge defense bill targeting Russia, sends it to Trump

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WASHINGTON — The US Senate easily passed a $716.3-billion defense authorizat­ion bill Wednesday that ramps up military spending and bolsters America’s posture against Russia, while avoiding policy changes that would have antagonize­d President Donald Trump.

The National Defense Authorizat­ion Act ( NDAA) passed 87 to 10 in the Senate a week after clearing the House of Representa­tives, and now heads to the White House for Mr. Trump’s signature.

The bill provides $ 69 billion in war funding known as overseas contingenc­y operations, authorizes a 2.6% pay raise for members of the armed forces, and invests tens of billions in modernizin­g the Pentagon’s air and sea fleets and missile defenses.

It bans delivery of F-35 Joint Strike Fighter aircraft to Turkey, a North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on ally with increasing­ly fraught relations with Washington, until Ankara can confirm it will not buy Russia’s S-400 anti-aircraft missile system.

And while China and Russia are classified as “strategic competitor­s” to the United States, the legislatio­n negotiated between the House and Senate left out a proposal by senators that would have blocked a deal Mr. Trump reached with Chinese telecommun­ications giant ZTE that eases tough financial penalties on the firm for helping Iran and North Korea evade American sanctions.

The capitulati­on smoothed things over with the White House, but it angered Republican Senator Marco Rubio, who voted against the bill.

GEOPOLITIC­AL COMPETITIO­N

“It’s time we opened our eyes,” Mr. Rubio told colleagues.

“We are engaged in a geopolitic­al competitio­n, not with some poor agrarian country trying to catch up, but with a global super power who is quickly nipping at our heels and doing so unfairly, with the intent of replacing us in the world as the most powerful country militarily, economical­ly, geopolitic­ally and technologi­cally.”

The NDAA also includes a provision allowing the administra­tion to waive some Russia-related sanctions that would have barred Washington from selling defenserel­ated equipment to countries using Russian technology.

Supporters of the provision stress that the change will help certain countries wean themselves off of Russian influence.

The bill including provisions which allow for better assessment of risks to US national security from transactio­ns involving foreign firms aiming to gain access to sensitive American technology.

It also extends a restrictio­n on US-Russian military cooperatio­n, and authorizes $65 million to revamp the US nuclear arsenal by developing new “low-yield” nuclear weapons.

This year’s NDAA was named after Senator John McCain, the Senate Armed Services Committee chairman and national security hawk who is home in Arizona battling brain cancer. —

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